Maurice Schwartz

Maurice Schwartz
Born Avram Moishe Schwartz
June 15, 1889
Russian Empire (Ukraine)
Died May 10, 1960 (aged 70)
Occupation Actor, film director, film producer, theatrical producer, screenwriter and theatre director
Years active 191053 (film)
Spouse(s) 1) Eva Rafalo; divorced.
2) Anna Bordofsky
Children adopted Moses and Fannie Englander, 1947

Maurice Schwartz, born Avram Moishe Schwartz[1] (June 15, 1889 – May 10, 1960)[2] was a Russian-born theatre and film actor active in the United States. He founded the Yiddish Art Theatre in 1918 in New York City and its associated school. He was its theatrical producer, and director. He also worked in Hollywood, mostly in silent films as an actor, but also as a film director, producer and screenwriter.

Early life and education

Schwartz was born Avram Moishe Schwartz in Sudlekov (Zhidachov), Ukraine, then part of the Russian Empire, to Isaac, a grain dealer, and his wife Rose Schwartz, a Jewish family. Moishe was the oldest of three boys among the six siblings, and had three older sisters.[1] Like many similar families, his immigrated to the United States in two parts. His father emigrated first in 1898 with the three teen-aged daughters, as they could all work to get started in New York and earn money for passage of the rest of the family. The following year, Isaac sent tickets for Rose and their sons. Rose and the boys made it to Liverpool, where they were to sail for the US, but got separated and she was forced to leave without Moishe. Without any English, he made his way to London, where he lived for two years, surviving with the help of strangers. His father located him in 1901, and they traveled together to New York when Moishe was twelve.[1]

Schwartz joined his family in their flat on the Lower East Side, where his father enrolled him in the Baron de Hirsch school, designed to teach immigrants. In the afternoon he worked with his father at his small factory to recycle rags for the clothing industry. In New York, he took the first name of Morris. His uncle introduced him to Yiddish theatre and he was captivated. Groups of boys and young men were partisans of different theatres and actors. Admiring the actors David Kessler and Jacob Adler, Morris began reading widely, including Henrik Ibsen and William Shakespeare.[3]

Because his Orthodox father opposed his desire to act, Morris moved out and to support himself, he took a variety of jobs. He finally got one acting, and traveled with companies out of town. He joined a couple of troupes, including one that toured the Midwest. He returned to New York in 1907, finding Kessler and Adler continuing to rise in their profession. Soon he had a contract with Mike Thomashevsky and acted in Philadelphia.[4]

Marriage and family

Schwartz was briefly married to Eva Rafalo, a contralto singer and Yiddish actress born in Cincinnati, Ohio, whom he met while touring with an acting company. They were divorced by 1911, after which he returned full-time to New York. She and her older sister Clara Rafalo were both actresses in the Yiddish theatre. After the divorce, Eva married Henry (Zvi Hersch) Fishman, another actor on the Yiddish stage.

In 1914 Schwartz married Anna Bordofsky, a 24-year-old woman from Brest-Litovsk, Russia, who had been in the United States about a decade. She was initially involved with Kessler's Yiddish theater as well. She became the business partner, helping run the theatre. They remained married until Schwartz's death.

In 1947 they adopted two Polish Jewish war orphans, Moses and Fannie Englander, aged 9- and 8-years old, respectively. After losing their parents Abraham Joseph and Chana Englander in 1942, the children had been placed by the underground with Belgian Christian families. Fannie was renamed Marcelle and grew up with Maurice and Denise Vander Voordt as the only parents she really knew. The Vander Voordts protected her as their own during the German occupation. She spoke only French.[5]

After the war, Jewish groups had worked to reunite families and place Jewish orphans with Jewish families. Schwartz met the boy Moses at the Wezembeek Orphanage in Belgium in 1946 while on a theatrical tour for displaced persons. He arranged to adopt Moses and his sister through the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC), which had located Fannie and brought the siblings together.[5] The Schwartzes met Fannie for the first time when she arrived with her brother at La Guardia Airport. They renamed the children Marvin and Risa.[6] In New York, they taught them Yiddish and English, and about Judaism.[5]

Career

Theatre

Schwartz started acting early, working for six years in companies and locations outside New York: the Midwest and Philadelphia. In 1911 he was hired by David Kessler for his company at his Second Avenue Theatre.[7] In 1913, he gained a Hebrew Actors Union card, having to take the test twice and do some politicking with influential leaders, such as Abe Cahan, editor of The Jewish Forward, to get voted in.[8] After a total of six years with Kessler, Schwartz had other ambitions to pursue.

In 1918 Schwartz founded the Yiddish Art Theatre, taking a lease on the Irving Place Theatre[9] on Second Avenue in New York City (since designated as the Yiddish Theater District for its history). He had ambitions for a people's theater that would produce classic, literary works. As he announced in The Day, a Yiddish-language newspaper, he wanted "a company that will be devoted to performing superior literary works that will bring honor to the Yiddish Theatre."[10]

Believing that an actor needed to develop by taking on a wide variety of roles, the next year he founded an associated school. He wanted to nurture talent by giving students chances to learn: he felt that taking on 25 roles would teach someone much about "the possibilities of voice, gesture and make-up."[7] Among the actors Schwartz helped develop were Paul Muni, who played 40 roles in his productions. Schwartz said of Muni in a 1931 interview: "He is a sincere actor. The theatre is more to him than just a job."[7]

The Yiddish Art Theatre operated for the next 40 years, and produced a rotating repertoire of 150 plays. They performed classics of Yiddish, European and English theatre, ranging from works by Sholem Aleichem to William Shakespeare.

Schwartz continued to perform and he was billed as the "Greatest of All Yiddish Actors" or the "Laurence Olivier of the Yiddish Stage". He also performed in English on Broadway and in other venues. His most lauded featured roles were as "Reb Malech" in Israel Joshua Singer's Yoshe Kalb, "Luka" in Maxim Gorki's The Lower Depths, Oswald in Henrick Ibsen's Ghosts, Shylock in William Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice, at the Palace Theatre,[7] and the title role in King Lear.

Schwartz took his company on a tour in Europe in 1924 and in South America in 1929. In 1928 he appeared on Broadway in the Inspector General and Anathema.[7]

Between 1931 and 1952, Schwartz appeared in four Broadway-theatre productions in New York City, some of which he produced, and produced others.[11] For example, in 1931 he appeared on Broadway at the Forty-ninth Street Theatre in Ernst Toller's Expressionist play, Bloody Laughter (Hinkemann).[7] (It had been produced in the UK in a cockney English version, and in Yiddish entitled The Red Laugh. Schwartz commissioned a translation for the New York production.)[12] Related to German expressionism and the First World War, the play was not well received.[12] Schwartz later traveled to the new nation of Israel and performed on stage there.

In 1931, the Yiddish theater was declining as ethnic Jews became more assimilated and audiences decreased. In an interview, Schwartz said, "The Jewish stage was once a night school to which people came to learn the language [English]. Now Jewish playwrights are confused. They cannot go back to the old themes because the Americanized Jew does not know that life, and they have not sufficiently assimilated the life here to understand and write about it."[7]

In the same interview, Schwartz said, "The theatre is my life. It is the only interest I have."[7]

Film

With his successes as an actor, Schwartz was also drawn to Hollywood, appearing in his first silent film in 1910. He appeared in more than twenty films between 1910 and 1953; the majority were silents.[13] He also wrote, produced or directed several films.[13]

Among his major roles in motion pictures were in Broken Hearts (1926), Uncle Moses (1932), Tevya (1939), Mission to Moscow (1943), and as Ezra in the Biblical drama Salome (1953).

Death

He died in Beilinson Hospital in Petah Tikva, Israel near Tel Aviv. He is buried in the Yiddish-theatre section of the Mount Hebron Cemetery in the Flushing neighborhood of Queens, a borough of New York City.

Selected filmography

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Martin Boris, Chap. One, Once a Kingdom: The Life of Maurice Schwartz and the Yiddish Art Theatre, published by permission of Boris estate, at Great Artist Series, Museum of Family History, accessed September 13, 2013
  2. Edelman, Marsha Bryan (2003). Discovering Jewish Music. Jewish Publication Society. p. 120. ISBN 0-8276-0727-X.
  3. Boris, Chap. Two, Once a Kingdom
  4. Boris, Chap. Five, Once a Kingdom
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Risa Schwartz Whiting, with Robin Whiting, "My Father, Maurice Schwartz", Lives in the Yiddish Theatre, Museum of Family History website, accessed September 13, 2013
  6. "Two War Orphans Arrive", New York Times, October 11, 1947
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 "Art and Mr. Schwartz", New York Times, December 20, 1931
  8. Martin Boris, Chap. Seven, Once a Kingdom: The Life of Maurice Schwartz and the Yiddish Art Theatre, Great Artists, Museum of Family History, accessed September 13, 2013
  9. "German Drama to Move; Irving Place Theatre Will Be Yiddish Playhouse". The New York Times (The New York Times Company). 14 February 1918. Retrieved 2009-06-14.
  10. "Yiddish Art Theatre", The Day, March 2, 1918
  11. Database (undated). "Maurice Schwartz". Internet Broadway Database Accessed January 28, 2010.
  12. 12.0 12.1 Peter Bauland, The Hooded Eagle: Modern German Drama on the New York Stage, Syracuse University Press, 1968, p. 112
  13. 13.0 13.1 Database (undated)."Filmography by type for Maurice Schwartz". Internet Movie Database. Accessed January 28, 2010.

External links